Non-human electoral candidate


Non-human electoral candidates have been found in a number of countries. Often, the candidacies are a means of casting a protest vote or satirizing the political system. At other times, it is simply done for entertainment value.
Electoral regulations may explicitly require candidates to be human, or they may require candidates to do things which animals cannot reasonably do ; most constituencies require candidates to be of the age of a legal adult, which eliminates many animals whose life expectancies usually make them too young to ever qualify. On some occasions, however, animals have been accepted as candidates, and they have even won office.

Notable examples

Elected to office

  • In 1967, in a write-in only election, the small town of Picoazá, Ecuador, elected the foot deodorant Pulvapies as its new municipal councilman.
  • Mayor Stubbs, a cat, was elected as the mayor of Talkeetna, Alaska from 1997 to 2017.

Non-elected candidates

Attempted or withdrawn candidates

Those that were not on the ballot, in chronological order.

Other non-elected posts

Folklore and pop culture

The 2013 Black Mirror episode "The Waldo Moment" explores the concept of a cartoon character electoral candidate. Several news reports, including one by Chris Cillizza, political reporter for The Washington Post, compared the 2016 Donald Trump political campaign to the episode; later, in September 2016, episode writer Charlie Brooker also compared the Trump campaign to The Waldo Moment and predicted Trump would win the 2016 election.
The nerd-folk song "President Snakes" from the 2015 album of the same name by the music duo The Doubleclicks explores how five snakes run as one electoral candidate.